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Madeleine Astor

Madeleine Talmage Astor (née Force; later Dick and Fiermonte; June 19, 1893 – March 27, 1940) was an American socialite and a survivor of the RMS Titanic.[1] She was the second wife and widow of businessman John Jacob Astor IV.

Madeleine Astor
Born
Madeleine Talmage Force

(1893-06-19)June 19, 1893
DiedMarch 27, 1940(1940-03-27) (aged 46)
Resting placeTrinity Church Cemetery
EducationMiss Ely's School
Miss Spence's School
Spouse(s)
(m. 1911; died 1912)

William Karl Dick
(m. 1916; div. 1933)

(m. 1933; div. 1938)
ChildrenJohn Jacob Astor VI
William Force Dick
John Henry Dick
RelativesKatherine Emmons Force (sister)
Tunis V. P. Talmage (grandfather)

Early life

 
Katherine (left) and Madeleine Force.

Madeleine Talmage Force was born on June 19, 1893, in Brooklyn, New York, the younger daughter of William Hurlbut Force (1852–1917) and the former Katherine Arvilla Talmage (1863–1930). Madeleine's elder sister Katherine Emmons Force was a real estate businesswoman and socialite. Through her father, she had French ancestry and was a great-niece of builder Ephraim S. Force (1822 – March 12, 1914).[2] Her mother had Dutch ancestry.

William Force was a member of a well-established business family. He owned the successful shipping firm William H. Force and Co., and his father had been prosperous in the manufacturing industry. In 1889, Force married Katherine Talmage, the granddaughter of former Brooklyn mayor Thomas Talmage. The Forces were part of Brooklyn high society, while William Force was a member of numerous prestigious clubs in the city.[3] He also owned an art collection. Like the Astor family, the Forces were members of the Episcopal Church. Madeleine's maternal grandfather was New York State Assemblyman Tunis V. P. Talmage and her great-grandfather, Thomas G. Talmage, was Mayor of Brooklyn.[4] She is also distantly related to Col. Benjamin Tallmadge, who served directly under George Washington in the American War of Independence.[5]

Madeleine was educated at Miss Ely's School and then for four years at Miss Spence's School, on West 48th Street in Manhattan. According to one report, she was "counted an especially brilliant pupil" at this school. She and her sister were also taken abroad by their mother and toured Europe several times. When she was introduced to New York social life, she was immediately adopted by the Junior League, a clique of debutantes.[6] She appeared in several New York society plays and attracted quite a following. She was known to be a very competent horsewoman and enjoyed yachting. One report said she was bright and good with drawing-room conversation.[6]

Courtship and first marriage

 
Madeleine with Colonel Astor.
 
Madeleine with John and their Airedale, Kitty.

She met Colonel John Jacob "Jack" Astor IV, the only son of businessman William Backhouse Astor, Jr. and socialite Caroline Webster "Lina" Schermerhorn.[7] During their courtship, he took her on automobile drives and yacht trips, and they were often followed by the press. They became engaged in August 1911 and were married on September 9, 1911.[8] There was a considerable amount of opposition to his marriage not only because of their age difference (29 years apart, with Madeline being 18, and John at 47)[9] but because of his recent divorce (November 1909) from his previous wife. After several Episcopal priests refused to celebrate the nuptials,[10] the couple were eventually married by a Congregationalist minister in Beechwood, his Newport mansion.[11] His son William Vincent Astor served as best man.[12]

After their marriage, they had an extended honeymoon. They visited several places locally first, then in January 1912, they sailed from New York on the Titanic's sister ship, the Olympic, and enjoyed a long Egyptian tour.[13] While returning from this part of their honeymoon, they booked their passage on the Titanic.

Aboard the Titanic

 
Newspaper report of the sinking of the Titanic. Most reports featured the Astors in the headlines.

Madeleine Astor, then five months pregnant, boarded the Titanic as a first-class passenger in Cherbourg, France, with her husband; her husband's valet, Victor Robbins; her maid, Rosalie Bidois; and her nurse, Caroline Endres. They also took Kitty, Astor's pet Airedale, and occupied one of the parlour suites. On the night of April 14, 1912, Colonel Astor reported to his wife that the ship had hit an iceberg. He reassured her that the damage did not appear serious, though he helped her strap on her life jacket. Whilst they were waiting on the boat-deck, Mrs. Astor lent Leah Aks, a third-class passenger, her fur shawl to keep her son, Filly, warm. At one point, the Astors retired to the gymnasium and sat on the mechanical horses in their life jackets. Colonel Astor found another life jacket which he reportedly cut with a pen knife to show Madeleine what it was made of. When it was time to board a lifeboat, Madeleine Astor, her maid, and her nurse had to crawl through the first-class promenade window into the tilting lifeboat 4 (which had been lowered down to A deck to take on more passengers). Astor had helped his wife to climb through the window and asked if he could accompany her as she was 'in a delicate condition'. The request was denied by Second Officer Charles Lightoller.[14] An account of Madeleine's boarding of the lifeboat was given by Archibald Gracie IV to the US Senate Titanic inquiry. Gracie was a fellow passenger and recalled the events regarding Madeleine Astor in the following terms.

The only incident I remember in particular at this point is when Mrs Astor was put in the boat. She was lifted up through the window, and her husband helped her on the other side, and when she got in, her husband was on one side of this window and I was on the other side, at the next window. I heard Mr Astor ask the second officer whether he would not be allowed to go aboard this boat to protect his wife. He said, 'No, sir, no man is allowed on this boat or any of the boats until the ladies are off.' Mr Astor then said, 'Well, tell me what is the number of this boat so I may find her afterwards,' or words to that effect. The answer came back, 'No. 4.'[15]

Astor and his valet died in the sinking; the former's body was recovered on April 22. He was found to be carrying about $2,500 in cash, brought with him from his cabin.[16] His young widow and the other survivors were rescued by the RMS Carpathia around 03:30.

Madeleine Astor gave an account of what she recalled almost immediately after her arrival home through her spokesman Nicholas Biddle, who was a trustee of the Astor estate. The account given by her spokesman is:

On landing from the Carpathia, the young bride widowed by the Titanic's sinking told members of her family what she could recall of the circumstances of the disaster. Of how Colonel Astor had met his death she had no definite conception.

She recalled she thought that in the confusion as she was about to be put into one of the boats Colonel Astor was standing by her side. After that she had no very clear recollection of the happenings until the boats were well clear of the sinking steamer.

Mrs Astor, it appears, left in one of the last boats which got away from the ship. It was her belief that all the women who wished to go had then been taken off. Her impression was that the boat she left in had room for at least 15 more persons. The men, for some reason (that) she could not and does not now understand, did not seem to be at all anxious to leave the ship. Almost everyone seemed dazed.[17]

Widowhood

 
Madeleine Astor 1915.

After Astor returned home from her ordeal, she was kept in strict retirement. Her first social function was not until the end of May, when she held a luncheon at her mansion on Fifth Avenue for Arthur Rostron, the captain of the Carpathia, and Dr. Frank McGee, the ship's surgeon. She held this event with Marian Thayer, also a survivor of the Titanic. Both wished to thank these men for their assistance when they were aboard the Carpathia.[18]

In his will, John Jacob Astor IV left his wife an outright sum of $100,000, the income from a trust fund of $5 million, and the use of the house on Fifth Avenue. Both of the latter provisions she would lose if she remarried. A fund of $3 million was set aside for his unborn child John Jacob "Jakey" Astor VI, which he would control when he became of age.[19] On August 14, 1912, Astor gave birth to Jakey at her Fifth Avenue mansion. For the next four years, she raised him as part of the Astor family. She did not seem to appear very often in society until the end of 1913, when according to the press, they published her first photograph since the Titanic disaster.[20]

After this, she appeared more often in public and her activities were frequently reported in the press. In 1915 she remodeled her house on Fifth Avenue and this was made a feature article in the New York Sun.[21] Many articles about her eldest son were also published.

Remarriages

Four years after Colonel Astor's death, Madeleine Astor married her childhood friend, banker William Karl Dick (May 28, 1888 – September 5, 1953), on June 22, 1916, in Bar Harbor, Maine, and honeymooned in California. He was a vice president of the Manufacturers Trust Company of New York and a part owner and director of the Brooklyn Times. As stated in Colonel Astor's will, she lost her stipend from his trust fund. They had two sons:

  • William Force Dick (April 11, 1917 – December 4, 1961)
  • John Henry Dick (May 12, 1919 – September 18, 1995) ornithologist, photographer, naturalist, conservationist, author, painter, and bird illustrator[22]

They divorced on July 21, 1933, in Reno, Nevada. Four months later, on November 27, 1933, Astor married Italian actor/boxer Enzo Fiermonte in a civil ceremony in New York City. They honeymooned in Palm Beach, Florida. They eventually moved there. They had no children together and divorced on June 11, 1938, in West Palm Beach, Florida.

Death

Madeleine Fiermonte died of a heart ailment at her mansion in Palm Beach on March 27, 1940, at the age of 46.[23] She was buried in Trinity Church Cemetery in New York City, in a mausoleum with her mother.

In popular culture

Film and TV

Books and literature

  • The Second Mrs. Astor, by Shana Abé (2021)

References

  1. ^ "Madeleine Force Astor Biography - Facts, Birthday, Life Story - Biography.com". Biography.com. Retrieved July 17, 2013.
  2. ^ "E. S. FORCE DIES AT 92" (PDF). The New York Times. March 12, 1914.
  3. ^ Howard, Henry Ward Beecher; Jervis, Arthur N. (1893). The Eagle and Brooklyn: the record of the progress of the Brooklyn daily eagle. Cornell University Library. Brooklyn : The Brooklyn daily eagle. p. 379.
  4. ^ "Tunis Van Pelt Talmage". The Brooklyn Daily Eagle. Vol. 70, no. 330. New York, N.Y. November 29, 1909. p. 3 – via Brooklyn Public Library Historical Newspapers.
  5. ^ Talmadge, Arthur White (1909). The Talmadge, Tallmadge and Talmage genealogy; being the descendants of Thomas Talmadge of Lynn, Massachusetts, with an appendix including other families. Allen County Public Library Genealogy Center. New York, The Grafton press.
  6. ^ a b "Eighteen-Year Old Madaline Force Has Difficult Task Ahead". The Washington times. August 3, 1911. p. 8. ISSN 1941-0697. Retrieved October 21, 2019.
  7. ^ "Bar Harbor's Social Season Promises to Lasi Until the Snow Flies --- Col. Astor a Host an Many Dinners" (PDF). The New York Times. Retrieved August 16, 2022.
  8. ^ "Col. Astor Weds Madeleine Force". The New York Times. September 9, 1911. Retrieved November 26, 2012. Col. John Jacob Astor, head of the Astor family in America, and one of this country's wealthiest men, was married at 9:55 o'clock this morning to Miss Madeleine Talmage Force, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William H. Force, of New York, at the Newport home of the bridegroom, Beechwood, on the Cliffs and Bellevue Avenue.
  9. ^ . rmstitanic.net. Archived from the original on September 27, 2013. Retrieved July 17, 2013.
  10. ^ "Meriden Morning Record". Google News Archive. August 9, 1911. p. 9. Retrieved October 21, 2019.
  11. ^ "Meriden Weekly Republican". Google News Archive. September 14, 1911. p. 11. Retrieved October 21, 2019.
  12. ^ The New York Times (September 10, 1911). "COL. ASTOR WEDS MADELEINE FORCE". encyclopedia titanica. Retrieved July 17, 2013.
  13. ^ Maxtone-Graham, John (March 19, 2012). Titanic Tragedy: A New Look at the Lost Liner. W. W. Norton & Company. ISBN 9780393083392.
  14. ^ "Colonel John Jacob Astor". encyclopedia titanica. Retrieved April 4, 2011.
  15. ^ United States Senate Inquiry into the Titanic. Online reference http://www.titanicinquiry.org/USInq/AmInq11Gracie01.php
  16. ^ "Colonel John Jacob Astor". Encyclopedia Titanica. Retrieved October 21, 2019.
  17. ^ The San Francisco Call., April 19, 1912, p. 1. Online reference http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn85066387/1912-04-19/ed-1/seq-1/
  18. ^ "Carpathia's Captain and Surgeon; Their Hostesses Titanic Widows". The evening world. New York. May 31, 1912. p. 1. ISSN 1941-0654. Retrieved October 21, 2019.
  19. ^ The Evening News (Providence R I), May 7, 1912, p. 1. Online reference https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=QupgAAAAIBAJ&sjid=u2MNAAAAIBAJ&pg=2415,1723472&dq=madeleine+force+astor&hl=en
  20. ^ The Logan Republican, November 29, 1913, p. 1. Online reference http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn85058246/1913-11-29/ed-1/seq-1/
  21. ^ The Sun (New York), April 25, 1915, p. Supplement 9. Online reference http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn83030272/1915-04-25/ed-1/seq-41/
  22. ^ "William K. Dick". Accuracy Project. Retrieved January 1, 2012.
  23. ^ "Mrs. Fiermonte Dead In Florida". The New York Times. Associated Press. March 28, 1940. Retrieved October 19, 2010.

External links

  • Behe, George; Phillip Gowan, Hermann Sōldner. "Mrs Madeleine Talmage Astor (née Force)". Encyclopedia Titanica. Retrieved July 15, 2005.
  • Madeleine Astor Death Certificate on Titanic-Titanic.com
  • Madeleine Astor at Titanic-Passengers.com

madeleine, astor, madeleine, talmage, astor, née, force, later, dick, fiermonte, june, 1893, march, 1940, american, socialite, survivor, titanic, second, wife, widow, businessman, john, jacob, astor, bornmadeleine, talmage, force, 1893, june, 1893brooklyn, yor. Madeleine Talmage Astor nee Force later Dick and Fiermonte June 19 1893 March 27 1940 was an American socialite and a survivor of the RMS Titanic 1 She was the second wife and widow of businessman John Jacob Astor IV Madeleine AstorBornMadeleine Talmage Force 1893 06 19 June 19 1893Brooklyn New York U S DiedMarch 27 1940 1940 03 27 aged 46 Palm Beach Florida U S Resting placeTrinity Church CemeteryEducationMiss Ely s School Miss Spence s SchoolSpouse s John Jacob Astor IV m 1911 died 1912 wbr William Karl Dick m 1916 div 1933 wbr Enzo Fiermonte m 1933 div 1938 wbr ChildrenJohn Jacob Astor VI William Force Dick John Henry DickRelativesKatherine Emmons Force sister Tunis V P Talmage grandfather Contents 1 Early life 2 Courtship and first marriage 3 Aboard the Titanic 4 Widowhood 5 Remarriages 6 Death 7 In popular culture 7 1 Film and TV 7 2 Books and literature 8 References 9 External linksEarly life Edit Katherine left and Madeleine Force Madeleine Talmage Force was born on June 19 1893 in Brooklyn New York the younger daughter of William Hurlbut Force 1852 1917 and the former Katherine Arvilla Talmage 1863 1930 Madeleine s elder sister Katherine Emmons Force was a real estate businesswoman and socialite Through her father she had French ancestry and was a great niece of builder Ephraim S Force 1822 March 12 1914 2 Her mother had Dutch ancestry William Force was a member of a well established business family He owned the successful shipping firm William H Force and Co and his father had been prosperous in the manufacturing industry In 1889 Force married Katherine Talmage the granddaughter of former Brooklyn mayor Thomas Talmage The Forces were part of Brooklyn high society while William Force was a member of numerous prestigious clubs in the city 3 He also owned an art collection Like the Astor family the Forces were members of the Episcopal Church Madeleine s maternal grandfather was New York State Assemblyman Tunis V P Talmage and her great grandfather Thomas G Talmage was Mayor of Brooklyn 4 She is also distantly related to Col Benjamin Tallmadge who served directly under George Washington in the American War of Independence 5 Madeleine was educated at Miss Ely s School and then for four years at Miss Spence s School on West 48th Street in Manhattan According to one report she was counted an especially brilliant pupil at this school She and her sister were also taken abroad by their mother and toured Europe several times When she was introduced to New York social life she was immediately adopted by the Junior League a clique of debutantes 6 She appeared in several New York society plays and attracted quite a following She was known to be a very competent horsewoman and enjoyed yachting One report said she was bright and good with drawing room conversation 6 Courtship and first marriage Edit Madeleine with Colonel Astor Madeleine with John and their Airedale Kitty She met Colonel John Jacob Jack Astor IV the only son of businessman William Backhouse Astor Jr and socialite Caroline Webster Lina Schermerhorn 7 During their courtship he took her on automobile drives and yacht trips and they were often followed by the press They became engaged in August 1911 and were married on September 9 1911 8 There was a considerable amount of opposition to his marriage not only because of their age difference 29 years apart with Madeline being 18 and John at 47 9 but because of his recent divorce November 1909 from his previous wife After several Episcopal priests refused to celebrate the nuptials 10 the couple were eventually married by a Congregationalist minister in Beechwood his Newport mansion 11 His son William Vincent Astor served as best man 12 After their marriage they had an extended honeymoon They visited several places locally first then in January 1912 they sailed from New York on the Titanic s sister ship the Olympic and enjoyed a long Egyptian tour 13 While returning from this part of their honeymoon they booked their passage on the Titanic Aboard the Titanic Edit Newspaper report of the sinking of the Titanic Most reports featured the Astors in the headlines Madeleine Astor then five months pregnant boarded the Titanic as a first class passenger in Cherbourg France with her husband her husband s valet Victor Robbins her maid Rosalie Bidois and her nurse Caroline Endres They also took Kitty Astor s pet Airedale and occupied one of the parlour suites On the night of April 14 1912 Colonel Astor reported to his wife that the ship had hit an iceberg He reassured her that the damage did not appear serious though he helped her strap on her life jacket Whilst they were waiting on the boat deck Mrs Astor lent Leah Aks a third class passenger her fur shawl to keep her son Filly warm At one point the Astors retired to the gymnasium and sat on the mechanical horses in their life jackets Colonel Astor found another life jacket which he reportedly cut with a pen knife to show Madeleine what it was made of When it was time to board a lifeboat Madeleine Astor her maid and her nurse had to crawl through the first class promenade window into the tilting lifeboat 4 which had been lowered down to A deck to take on more passengers Astor had helped his wife to climb through the window and asked if he could accompany her as she was in a delicate condition The request was denied by Second Officer Charles Lightoller 14 An account of Madeleine s boarding of the lifeboat was given by Archibald Gracie IV to the US Senate Titanic inquiry Gracie was a fellow passenger and recalled the events regarding Madeleine Astor in the following terms The only incident I remember in particular at this point is when Mrs Astor was put in the boat She was lifted up through the window and her husband helped her on the other side and when she got in her husband was on one side of this window and I was on the other side at the next window I heard Mr Astor ask the second officer whether he would not be allowed to go aboard this boat to protect his wife He said No sir no man is allowed on this boat or any of the boats until the ladies are off Mr Astor then said Well tell me what is the number of this boat so I may find her afterwards or words to that effect The answer came back No 4 15 Astor and his valet died in the sinking the former s body was recovered on April 22 He was found to be carrying about 2 500 in cash brought with him from his cabin 16 His young widow and the other survivors were rescued by the RMS Carpathia around 03 30 Madeleine Astor gave an account of what she recalled almost immediately after her arrival home through her spokesman Nicholas Biddle who was a trustee of the Astor estate The account given by her spokesman is On landing from the Carpathia the young bride widowed by the Titanic s sinking told members of her family what she could recall of the circumstances of the disaster Of how Colonel Astor had met his death she had no definite conception She recalled she thought that in the confusion as she was about to be put into one of the boats Colonel Astor was standing by her side After that she had no very clear recollection of the happenings until the boats were well clear of the sinking steamer Mrs Astor it appears left in one of the last boats which got away from the ship It was her belief that all the women who wished to go had then been taken off Her impression was that the boat she left in had room for at least 15 more persons The men for some reason that she could not and does not now understand did not seem to be at all anxious to leave the ship Almost everyone seemed dazed 17 Widowhood Edit Madeleine Astor 1915 After Astor returned home from her ordeal she was kept in strict retirement Her first social function was not until the end of May when she held a luncheon at her mansion on Fifth Avenue for Arthur Rostron the captain of the Carpathia and Dr Frank McGee the ship s surgeon She held this event with Marian Thayer also a survivor of the Titanic Both wished to thank these men for their assistance when they were aboard the Carpathia 18 In his will John Jacob Astor IV left his wife an outright sum of 100 000 the income from a trust fund of 5 million and the use of the house on Fifth Avenue Both of the latter provisions she would lose if she remarried A fund of 3 million was set aside for his unborn child John Jacob Jakey Astor VI which he would control when he became of age 19 On August 14 1912 Astor gave birth to Jakey at her Fifth Avenue mansion For the next four years she raised him as part of the Astor family She did not seem to appear very often in society until the end of 1913 when according to the press they published her first photograph since the Titanic disaster 20 After this she appeared more often in public and her activities were frequently reported in the press In 1915 she remodeled her house on Fifth Avenue and this was made a feature article in the New York Sun 21 Many articles about her eldest son were also published Remarriages EditFour years after Colonel Astor s death Madeleine Astor married her childhood friend banker William Karl Dick May 28 1888 September 5 1953 on June 22 1916 in Bar Harbor Maine and honeymooned in California He was a vice president of the Manufacturers Trust Company of New York and a part owner and director of the Brooklyn Times As stated in Colonel Astor s will she lost her stipend from his trust fund They had two sons William Force Dick April 11 1917 December 4 1961 John Henry Dick May 12 1919 September 18 1995 ornithologist photographer naturalist conservationist author painter and bird illustrator 22 They divorced on July 21 1933 in Reno Nevada Four months later on November 27 1933 Astor married Italian actor boxer Enzo Fiermonte in a civil ceremony in New York City They honeymooned in Palm Beach Florida They eventually moved there They had no children together and divorced on June 11 1938 in West Palm Beach Florida Death EditMadeleine Fiermonte died of a heart ailment at her mansion in Palm Beach on March 27 1940 at the age of 46 23 She was buried in Trinity Church Cemetery in New York City in a mausoleum with her mother In popular culture EditFilm and TV Edit Charlotte Thiele Titanic 1943 Frances Bergen Titanic 1953 Beverly Ross S O S Titanic 1979 TV movie Janne Mortil Titanic 1996 miniseries Charlotte Chatton Titanic 1997 Piper Gunnarson Ghosts of the Abyss 2003 documentary Angela Eke Titanic 2012 miniseries Books and literature Edit The Second Mrs Astor by Shana Abe 2021 References Edit Madeleine Force Astor Biography Facts Birthday Life Story Biography com Biography com Retrieved July 17 2013 E S FORCE DIES AT 92 PDF The New York Times March 12 1914 Howard Henry Ward Beecher Jervis Arthur N 1893 The Eagle and Brooklyn the record of the progress of the Brooklyn daily eagle Cornell University Library Brooklyn The Brooklyn daily eagle p 379 Tunis Van Pelt Talmage The Brooklyn Daily Eagle Vol 70 no 330 New York N Y November 29 1909 p 3 via Brooklyn Public Library Historical Newspapers Talmadge Arthur White 1909 The Talmadge Tallmadge and Talmage genealogy being the descendants of Thomas Talmadge of Lynn Massachusetts with an appendix including other families Allen County Public Library Genealogy Center New York The Grafton press a b Eighteen Year Old Madaline Force Has Difficult Task Ahead The Washington times August 3 1911 p 8 ISSN 1941 0697 Retrieved October 21 2019 Bar Harbor s Social Season Promises to Lasi Until the Snow Flies Col Astor a Host an Many Dinners PDF The New York Times Retrieved August 16 2022 Col Astor Weds Madeleine Force The New York Times September 9 1911 Retrieved November 26 2012 Col John Jacob Astor head of the Astor family in America and one of this country s wealthiest men was married at 9 55 o clock this morning to Miss Madeleine Talmage Force daughter of Mr and Mrs William H Force of New York at the Newport home of the bridegroom Beechwood on the Cliffs and Bellevue Avenue Titanic Survivor Stories Madeleine Talmage Force Astor rmstitanic net Archived from the original on September 27 2013 Retrieved July 17 2013 Meriden Morning Record Google News Archive August 9 1911 p 9 Retrieved October 21 2019 Meriden Weekly Republican Google News Archive September 14 1911 p 11 Retrieved October 21 2019 The New York Times September 10 1911 COL ASTOR WEDS MADELEINE FORCE encyclopedia titanica Retrieved July 17 2013 Maxtone Graham John March 19 2012 Titanic Tragedy A New Look at the Lost Liner W W Norton amp Company ISBN 9780393083392 Colonel John Jacob Astor encyclopedia titanica Retrieved April 4 2011 United States Senate Inquiry into the Titanic Online reference http www titanicinquiry org USInq AmInq11Gracie01 php Colonel John Jacob Astor Encyclopedia Titanica Retrieved October 21 2019 The San Francisco Call April 19 1912 p 1 Online reference http chroniclingamerica loc gov lccn sn85066387 1912 04 19 ed 1 seq 1 Carpathia s Captain and Surgeon Their Hostesses Titanic Widows The evening world New York May 31 1912 p 1 ISSN 1941 0654 Retrieved October 21 2019 The Evening News Providence R I May 7 1912 p 1 Online reference https news google com newspapers id QupgAAAAIBAJ amp sjid u2MNAAAAIBAJ amp pg 2415 1723472 amp dq madeleine force astor amp hl en The Logan Republican November 29 1913 p 1 Online reference http chroniclingamerica loc gov lccn sn85058246 1913 11 29 ed 1 seq 1 The Sun New York April 25 1915 p Supplement 9 Online reference http chroniclingamerica loc gov lccn sn83030272 1915 04 25 ed 1 seq 41 William K Dick Accuracy Project Retrieved January 1 2012 Mrs Fiermonte Dead In Florida The New York Times Associated Press March 28 1940 Retrieved October 19 2010 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Madeleine Astor Behe George Phillip Gowan Hermann Sōldner Mrs Madeleine Talmage Astor nee Force Encyclopedia Titanica Retrieved July 15 2005 Madeleine Astor Death Certificate on Titanic Titanic com Madeleine Astor at Titanic Passengers com Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Madeleine Astor amp oldid 1128064579, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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